The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, May 14, 1945, Page 3, Image 3

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THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGON, MONDAY, MAY 14. 1945
PAGE THREE
i Lend-Lease Cuts
To Affect Russia
And Great Britain
Washington, May 14 anMore
big lend-lease cuts, including a
slash of nearly 50 per cent In U.S.
war aid to Britain, were in pros
pect today following curtailment
of the bulk of this country's $300,.
000,000 a month shipments to
Russia.
At the same time some top U.S.
officials were said on good author
ity to believe, the drastic cut in
lend-lease to the Soviet Union
might figure in relaxing the stale
mate in the Polish situation.
Though . the Russian curtail
ment assertedly was based solely
' on the fact that Russia is no long
er a fighting ally, It was said to
demonstrate a willingness on this
country's part to be "tough." This,
it was felt, might further convince
Soviet Marshal Josef Stalin that
the U. S. will not yield to Russian
wishes in regard to. Poland. .
Wants Recognition
Russia is eager to win recognl-
tion for the soviet-sponsored Pol
ish government now installed In
Warsaw, while British and the
U. S. are insisting that the gov
ernment must first be recognized
in line with the Yalta agreement.
It was pointed out that while
lend-lease is- strictly a war opera
tion, Russia is eager to receive
postwar credits from this country
to enable her to buy American
machinery with which to rebuild
Russian industry. This country's
readiness to cut lend-lease ship
ments promptly jind without hesi
tation was seen as a hint to Rus
sia to meet other allied nations
half-way or face difficulty with
the postwar financing problem.
Announcement Due
President Truman is expected
to make an announcement on Rus
sian lend-lease shortly.
Disclosure of the sharp cut in
lend-lease to Russia was made
Saturday by Foreign Economic
Administrator Leo T. Crowley. He
said "new shipments to Europe"
had been halted except those des
tined for countries stjll fighting
Japan or those where lend-lease
would aid redeployment of Amer
ican armed forces.
Lt. A. G.Paul
In Philippines
Naval Air Station, Honolulu,
May 14 Lt. Alexander G. Paul,
Jr., USNR, of Madison, Florida
and Bend, Oregon, is now in the
S Philippine islands on duty at an
advanced base unit of the Pacific
Wing of the Naval Air Transport
Service Command. Since being as
. signed to NATS Pacific, he his
done air transport officer work at
Canton island and in the Admir
alty islands.
As an air transport officer, Lt.
Paul supervises servicing of
NATS aircraft at stops along
more than 3O,000 miles of routes
in the Pacific. Flying more than
5,000,000 miles a month, planes of
the NATS Pacific Wing link every
ship and advanced base of the
navy with supply lines on the
mainland.
Served In CASU
At Canton, Lt. Paul was offi-cer-in-charge
of the NATS unit.
Before being assigned to NATS,
he served in a CASU (carrier air
service unit) in Hawaii.
Lt. Paul was with The Shevlin
Hixon Company in Bend, Ore., be
fore entering the navy In Decem
ber, 1942. His wife and two chil-
aren make their home in Madison,
Fla. He is a graduate of Hill
school, Pottstown, Pa., and of
Princeton university class of 1923.
Saturn and Moon
Billed for Show
The crescent moon, only four
days old and hanging low in the
western skies above the white
Three Sisters, is scheduled to
"blot out" a planet this evening,
and, as viewed from Bend, the
show will prove worthwhile, local
amateur astronomers report.
The dark side of the young
moon will eclipse Saturn, one of
the' major planets of the solar
system, about sunset. Strong bin
oculars or telescopes will be need
ed to view the occuitation, Prof.
J. Hugh Pruett, University of Ore
gon astronomer, has announced.
The western skies will still be
bright when the occuitation oc
curs. Later in the evening, the moon
will be seen just to the east of
Saturn providing the skies are
clear.
FOOD RATION STAMPS GOOD
FEB. MAR. APR, j JUNE JULY AUG. ,
HBP STAMPS
3E3s HP! FR0M MAY 1
' PHH THRU AUG. 31
Nut stamps btcoms good in Junt
DLUE STAMPS
Mm TH.jg '
DQEj3Q from may i
BHjffllll THRU AUG. 31
Nxt stamps becomo good in Junt
I I I -
SUGAR STAMPS
' I L 1
tjjsU8A THRU JUNE 2 j '
fc Lt-1 ffcoTTMATT
KH THRU AUG. 31
I I r r i i
CUP THIS CHART FOR FUTURE REFERENCE
Lt. Bob Yancey
U. S. Naval Air Station, Ft
Lauderdale, Fla., May 14 Lt.
( jg) Robert O. Yancey, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Orvllle .Yancey, Prlne
ville, received the air medal here
Saturday.
His citation is mostly confiden
tial but the part we can quote
says: "For distinguishing himself
. . . in the vicinity of the Philip
pines on Oct. 15, 1944. As a pilot
of a carrier-based fighter plane he
participated in an attack against
the enemy which encountered nu
merically superior air opposition.
In this action he engaged and
shot down one enemy fighter
plane. His courage and skill
throughout were In keeping with
the highest traditions of the U. S.
naval service." It was signed by
Vice-Admiral M. A. Mitscher,
commander carrier task force,
U. S. Pacific fleet.
Lt. Yancey attended the Univer
sity of Oregon for three years be
fore joining the navy. At present
he is under instruction as a land
ing signal officer.
Cut in Sugar
Faces Canners
Applications for home canning
sugar will be available at grocery
stores or from the local war price
and ration board beginning May
15, OPA officials announced to
day, v
It is pointed out that the forms
were printed before the change in
regulations, and that only 15
pounds of sugar per person, not
to exceed 120 pounds for a family
unit, will be available, rather than
the 20-pound per person, 160-pound
maximum tormeriy announced.
Spare stamp 13 from ration book
No. 4 must be attached to the ap
plication for each . person for
whom sugar is required, lt was
emphasized.
The board stressed the Import
ance of applicants' use of correct
mailing addresses in their applica
tions, explaining that ration cer
tificates are often held up because
of failure to state complete and
correct addresses.
The applications for canning
sugar may be mailed or brought
to' the OPA office in the library
building.
Pony Buttes Home
Destroyed by Fire
. Madras, May 14 (Special) The
L. C. Thornton home at Pony
buttes, near Ashwood was com
pletely destroyed by fire last
week. This is the second home to
have burned in this locality with
in the last two weeks. The other
was the Nartz home. There was
no insurance on the Thornton residence.
Dinner was on the table when
the fire was . discovered, on the
roof. Before help could be ob
tained, the house was in flames.
Mrs. Thornton was in Redmond
where her children are in school.
Mn. and Mrs. F. R. Wharton and
Mrs. and Mrs. Gerald Thornton
were working at the ranch at the
time, borne newly purchased fur
niture belonging to the Gerald
mormons was destroyed.
Buy National War Bonds Now!
WIDE FIELD FOR WOMEN
Chicago ill"! The food products
Industry offers more than 413
different types of permanent jobs
for women and girls, according to
Mrs. Anne V. Zinsor, chairman of
the Women's executive committee
of the Illinois office of public in
struction. A survey of food pro
duction plants revealed that 153
new types of jobs in the industry
have been opened to women in
the past three years, Mrs. Zinsor
reports.
Anna C. Firlcus
Funeral Is Set
Funeral services will be held at
8 a. m Wprlnpfirlav frnm tha r'ntH-
olic church for Anna Catherine
irKUs, who died last Thursday at
the St. Charles hncnltal Vtonita.
tion of the rosary will be at 7
p. in. juesuay irom me iwswon
ger and Winslow chapel.
Mrs. JFirkus is survIvoH hv v,
husband, George Edward Firkus,
1312 Milwnilkno rtna cnn Tnxr..
one sister and' four brothers.'
Burial will be in Greenwood ceme
tery. ' ,
CLERGYMAN WORKS FAST
Cambridge. Mass Ul'iA Cam.
bridge patrolman tore up a ticket
he had issued to a clergyman
driver when the cleric explained,
"Officer, you have to hustle if
you re going to save souls."
tMA TOP-HAT'
m
llllsaaV . I It
FEATURING"
1 MM .
.uA Lynne Stevens
Thurs., May 17
9 to 1
Bend Roller Rink
CREAM
tlUCIOUI-IMOOIN-MO ICI CIYSTAIS
INIIMNSIVI-IUtl TO SI 00S
ENJOY MAKING IT
osily in your refrigerator. Mix, whip
pnd frt evaporated milk, milk,
ure tweet cream, tveer, wlrti
ANY FLAVOR
- and follow one of the 20 fame
. recipe fn each 15c packoae of
LOtlDOMIttRy
BRAND
STABILIZER
fleaes atk rsur wr
BRUSHES GLASS MIRRORS
PAINTERS SUPPLIES
CLEAN-UP AIDS
AsIc us for an estimate
on your work!
' Wollh.de Interior
Flat and Semi-Glow
Waterspar Enamels
. and Varnishes
Sun-Proof Paint
Florhide Enamel
SIMPSON PAINT CO.
Local Bui
Is Under Attack
Salem, Ore., May 14 P The
so-called "local budget law" of
the recent legislature, signed by
both presiding officers and the
governor, and now being included
in the session laws, is not the bill
as passed by the legislature, it
was claimed today by the Oregon
Business and Tax Research inc.
The group has filed a suit to
enjoin Secretary of State Robert'
S. Farrell, Jr., from Including the
measure in the 1945 laws.
The tax organization claims
that a conference report, adopted
by both houses, was left out of
the engrossed bill by Inadvert
ance, and that the lack changes
the import of the law.
IMS is tne nrst action cnai
lenelne the validity of a 1945 law,
but the bill is not being attacked
as to purpose or constitution
ality, according to F. H. Young,
manager of the tax group.i
Is Now Law
The bill, (HB 403) which car
ried the emergency clause and is
now law, proposed to set up "cash
working accounts" to tide over
local budget accounts from one
taxing period to the next.
"The question for the courts,"
Young said, "is whether a bill
signed by the governor and, pre
siding officers of- the two legisla-.
tive branches, is tne law or Ore
gon, or whether the measure as
enacted, as shown by the legisla
ture's journal, is the law of this
state."
Wilbur Henderson,
as legal adviser to the governor
during the session, has .been re
tained to bring the suit.
Churchill Speaks
(Continued from Pace One)
shattered as Berlin."
Making one of his strongest
points, Churchill said:
"We have yet to make suro that
the simple and honorable pur
poses for which we entered the
war are not brushed aside or over
looked in the months following
our success and that the words
'freedom,' 'democracy' and 'liber
ation' are not distorted from their
true meaning as we have under
stood them."
In the vindictive mood he once
reserved for Mussolini he fixed
an eye on Eire and said :
"With a restraint and pose to
which, I say, history will find
few parallels, his majesty's gov
ernment never laid a violent hand,
although at time it would have
been quite easy and quite natur
al, and we left the De Valera gov
ernment to frolic with the Ger
mans and later with the Japanese
representatives to their hearts'
content."
However, in a mellower mood,
he recalled Irish Victoria Cross
heroes and said, "and then I must
confess that the bitterness by
Britain against the Irish race dies
in my heart."
advanced to storekeeper, first MOTHERS HONORED
class. He is now attached to one Redmond, May 14 (Special)--of
the newest and largest aircraft; Tributes were paid to mothers, at
tuft-taw? In k ..: tii- , .... V ,
II? ,c K-K- wiie, me specially arranged programs
Mrs. VVilma Wyatt Haynle is liv- held In the various Redmond
". - cnurcnes on sunaay morning.
' " : ' Chancels were decorated with
Buy National War Bonds Nowl ' flowers, special music and scr-
HEX HAYNIE PROMOTED
Aboard an Aircraft Carrier In
the Pacific Rex Arthur Haynie;
265 Riverside. Bend. Ore., now
who acted serving in the navy, was recently
mons were the special part ot the
programs.
On long combat missions, a
food warmer, plugged into the
aircraft's electrical system, keeps
hot foods at 160 degrees Fahrenheit.
y'..the.beerwiththe V'') '
M high I .QjQ''"' ' Is y JTf
ACME mwiWf $ Son Ffoncfuo . jl Vaw 3
Out ou the fighting front, they win
beach heads and hold'eml Let's do
the same, here on the home front
...buy War Bonds. ..and hold 'em!
Medo-Land Creamery Co.
. Bend Distributors
T0'AiElM FOGMTIIRG SNS AMD
PAflGMTEIRSo0o ETElMAL GIRATITU1PE
TA 71Yz '''' '
f tm r mr mw
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u
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'e comes a
m
GENERAL
MOTORS
From those who have served
theircountryonfar-offfields
of combat, we have now
received the first priceless
gift of Victory . . . and with
this Victory a challenge!
For from these men who have sacrificed
so much and from the other millions
who have backed their efforts by carrying
on so effectively their appointed tasks at
home comes the demand that total vic
tory and final peace, through triumph over
Japan, shall bring them the opportunities
for which they fought and worked the
opportunities to live, progress and prosper.
Here is a challenge to us all a challenge
to see to it that the road to realization
of these natural human ambitions runs
smooth and straight.
We of General Motors believe that what
is good for our country and our country
men is good for General Motors; and that
there are time-tried and unfailing guides
upon which Americans can depend.
They can be described in terms of cer
tain simple "articles of faith":
Faith in America and in America's
future a future of expanding, useful pro
ductivity and ever higher standards of
living.
Faith in the rightness and benefits of
v ...
individual freedom and individual enter
prise. Faith in the principle that there can be
no rights without responsibilities no
privileges to enjoy without duties to
perform.
Faith in work, as the forerunner of
reward in incentive, as the kindling
spark of productive energy in opportu
nity to serve a need, as the first requirement
to provide a job.
Faith in the American way of doing
things, by which each person, each organi
zation, each industry, each business must
take its place and be granted that place
according to ability and capacity in one
great, coordinated, intcr-gcared system of
oaiieo&e
living, working and contributing to the
national welfare.
Faith in America's progressive instinct
and in the things which serve it science,
research, engineering, technical knowl
edge and skill.
Faith in the rights of great and small
alike and of the importance of each in a
free, peaceful and productive nation.
Before us lies one immediate, definite
task more important than all others to
defeat Japan.
With the first big obstacle to final
victory removed it is not too soon, we
think, to face the challenge of that peace
which our fighting men will have won so
dearly.
We believe the principles which we
have stated arc those with which the chal
lenge must be met.
We believe that if we follow these prin
cipleswith stout hearts and willing
hands America's future will inevitably
bring better things or more people.
GENERAL MOTORS
General Motors units engaged in the war efjort:
CHEVROLET PONTIAC . OLDSMOBH-E BUICK . CADILLAC FISHER BODY FRICIDAIRE . CMC TRUCK & COACH
AC Spark Plug .Allison .Cleveland Diesel Delco Appliance . Delco Products .Delco-Remy Detroit Diesel Eastern Aircraft . Electro-Motive .Guide Lamp. Hyatt
Nw IJrparture Avroproduct. . Urn-Llp-c:hapln Orlro Radlu . Iletrolt Transmlulon IMeacI Equipment . llurriaon Kadlatur Inland Mtiralnc Product. . Packard Electric Proving Ground
u-ch Laboratories . Rochester Products Saftlnaw Malleable Iron . Haftlnaw Meeting Oear Terntlrdt mited Motors Nervtcs (j.M, uvvrs- rperatlons . Cjenersl Motors Parts
general Motors Institute , General Motors of Canada, Ltd. . McKlnnon Industries, Ltd.
125 Oregon
Phone 21
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